Authors
Stephen B Goodwin, Sarrah Ben M'Barek, Braham Dhillon, Alexander HJ Wittenberg, Charles F Crane, James K Hane, Andrew J Foster, Theo AJ Van der Lee, Jane Grimwood, Andrea Aerts, John Antoniw, Andy Bailey, Burt Bluhm, Judith Bowler, Jim Bristow, Ate van der Burgt, Blondy Canto-Canché, Alice CL Churchill, Laura Conde-Ferràez, Hans J Cools, Pedro M Coutinho, Michael Csukai, Paramvir Dehal, Pierre De Wit, Bruno Donzelli, Henri C van de Geest, Roeland CHJ van Ham, Kim E Hammond-Kosack, Bernard Henrissat, Andrzej Kilian, Adilson K Kobayashi, Edda Koopmann, Yiannis Kourmpetis, Arnold Kuzniar, Erika Lindquist, Vincent Lombard, Chris Maliepaard, Natalia Martins, Rahim Mehrabi, Jan PH Nap, Alisa Ponomarenko, Jason J Rudd, Asaf Salamov, Jeremy Schmutz, Henk J Schouten, Harris Shapiro, Ioannis Stergiopoulos, Stefano FF Torriani, Hank Tu, Ronald P de Vries, Cees Waalwijk, Sarah B Ware, Ad Wiebenga, Lute-Harm Zwiers, Richard P Oliver, Igor V Grigoriev, Gert HJ Kema
Publication date
2011/6/9
Journal
PLoS genetics
Volume
7
Issue
6
Pages
e1002070
Publisher
Public Library of Science
Description
The plant-pathogenic fungus Mycosphaerella graminicola (asexual stage: Septoria tritici) causes septoria tritici blotch, a disease that greatly reduces the yield and quality of wheat. This disease is economically important in most wheat-growing areas worldwide and threatens global food production. Control of the disease has been hampered by a limited understanding of the genetic and biochemical bases of pathogenicity, including mechanisms of infection and of resistance in the host. Unlike most other plant pathogens, M. graminicola has a long latent period during which it evades host defenses. Although this type of stealth pathogenicity occurs commonly in Mycosphaerella and other Dothideomycetes, the largest class of plant-pathogenic fungi, its genetic basis is not known. To address this problem, the genome of M. graminicola was sequenced completely. The finished genome contains 21 chromosomes, eight of which could be lost with no visible effect on the fungus and thus are dispensable. This eight-chromosome dispensome is dynamic in field and progeny isolates, is different from the core genome in gene and repeat content, and appears to have originated by ancient horizontal transfer from an unknown donor. Synteny plots of the M. graminicola chromosomes versus those of the only other sequenced Dothideomycete, Stagonospora nodorum, revealed conservation of gene content but not order or orientation, suggesting a high rate of intra-chromosomal rearrangement in one or both species. This observed “mesosynteny” is very different from synteny seen between other organisms. A surprising feature of the M. graminicola genome …
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